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PHP Shorthand ternary operator "?:" Parse error unexpected ":"

I've just uploaded some old PHP files to a new server and am getting parse errors (Unexpected ':') on shorthand ternary ops. eg:

$y = $x ?: "Some default"; 

php version is 5.2.16 The code is littered with these shorthand ?:, so before changing them all I thought I'd see if anyone knows anything about this as I've not used PHP for a while now.

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Paul Kersey Avatar asked Jun 08 '11 10:06

Paul Kersey


1 Answers

This is only available since PHP 5.3

The expression (expr1) ? (expr2) : (expr3) evaluates to expr2 if expr1 evaluates to TRUE, and expr3 if expr1 evaluates to FALSE.

Since PHP 5.3, it is possible to leave out the middle part of the ternary operator. Expression expr1 ?: expr3 returns expr1 if expr1 evaluates to TRUE, and expr3 otherwise.1

See this example for more context.

or a more useful but note in the comments: http://www.php.net/manual/en/control-structures.if.php#102060


1http://php.net/manual/en/language.operators.comparison.php

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azat Avatar answered Sep 20 '22 02:09

azat